BOBBY FULTON DISCUSSES THE MAGIC OF THE FANTASTICS, YOUNG JIM CORNETTE AND MUCH MORE

By Two Man Power Trip Podcast on 7/29/2017 2:54 PM

Today The Two Man Power Trip of Wrestling welcomes a phenomenal tag team specialist and one half of the legendary duo of The Fantastics as Bobby Fulton joins today's program. In this interview with John and Chad, Fulton relives some of his career highlights as a member of The Fantastics as well as discuss some of their best matches and feuds with the likes of The Midnight Express and The Sheepherders. The full episode can be downloaded at this link.

"All I can tell you is this, it was magic. It was magical. Why I say that is because we went out there and we put our guts out and magic took place. People talk about our matches with The Midnight Express and our matches with The Sheepherders but often times we had great matches with teams like Eddie Gilbert and Sting, Jack Victory and John Tatum and with a lot of other tag teams that with me and Tommy both at 5' 9'' we really knew that I couldn't have gotten that far with out him and he wouldn't have gotten as far without me. It was supposed to have been a ninety day replacement team and that was it. Bill Watts and Bill Dundee put Tommy and I together and it became magical. We had tremendous matches with a lot of great tag teams."

Meeting a young photographer named Jim Cornette in Memphis:

"I was recovering from a broken arm and I called The Cuban Assassin who was wrestling in Memphis to try and get me on there (Memphis TV) and he got me an opportunity to go there to that territory. When I started going to Louisville and Evansville and being broke from healing up from a broken arm, Jimmy Cornette and his mother worked for Ms. Christine Jarrett (mother of Jeff Jarrett) and I ended up going to Louisville and me and Jimmy and Mama Cornette would ride from there to Evansville and they helped me out and me and Jimmy became great friends. As a matter of fact it was Jimmy that turned me on to the style of Tiger Mask. I had met Dynamite Kid while working for Stu Hart but it was seeing the Dynamite Kid and Tiger Mask from Jimmy."

"Jimmy loved the wrestling business. He ate, drank and slept wrestling. He was a great student of the game and he knew so much that I told him that you might never be a wrestler but someday you are going to do something big in the wrestling business because he just had such a great understanding of professional wrestling and he was also a great photographer."

The violent and crazy matches between The Fantastics and The Sheepherders (The Bushwackers):

"It was a good combination because they were like wild animals and we were the young white meat babyfaces and meaning that we were there to draw the women and it became unbelievable what our matches with those guys were. Those guys were really something else and I mean that in a way that they made us make believers out of everybody. They ended up saying not only do these guys look good but they got in the ring and they would bleed like stuck hogs and fight to no end."

"As a matter of fact it was Luke Williams who gave me my first break in San Antonio and The Sheepherdes (later The Bushwackers) were blood-thirsy "mate" and with all of the blood and guts they helped get us over."

For This and every other episode of The Two Man Power Trip of Wrestling please subscribe to us on iTunes, Podomatic, Player FM, Tune In Radio and The IRW Network, The EXCLUSIVE home of The Triple Threat Podcast featuring Shane Douglas & TMPToW. As well as follow us on Twitter @TwoManPowerTrip

Third Party Advertising: We use third-party advertising companies to serve ads when you visit our Web site. These companies may use information (not including your name, address, email address or telephone number) about your visits to this and other Web sites in order to provide advertisements on this site and other sites about goods and services that may be of interest to you. In the course of serving advertisements to this site, our third-party advertiser may place or recognize a unique cookie on your browser.